from the there-goes-that-one dept

A few weeks back, we wrote about a lawsuit involving porn company Liberty Media, once again trying to make a negligence claim against the operator of a WiFi network, because someone else had downloaded infringing content on that network (and, in this case, apparently the owner of the network was aware of this). As we noted, the EFF was troubled by this line of reasoning and filed an amicus brief arguing that the negligence theory would set a dangerous precedent. The court has now ruled and rejected the negligence theory as "untenable."

The right that
Liberty seeks to vindicate by its state law negligence claim – the imposition of liability on one who
knowingly contributes to a direct infringement by another – already is protected by the Copyright
Act under the doctrine of contributory infringement.

Liberty nevertheless argues that its negligence claim asserted here is not preempted because, as the Court understands the argument, the negligence claim rests on infringement by others whereas the Copyright Act provides a remedy only against a direct infringer. In light of the preceding discussion and the doctrine of contributory infringement – which Liberty’s memorandum
ignores entirely – that position is untenable.

The court dismissed the entire complaint, but more on a technicality (the work named does not match the registered copyright). But it certainly appears from this ruling that the negligence claim (and others like it) are dead issues. Someone could, conceivably be sued for contributory infringement for how they run the network (if they actively participate), but negligence? Nope.

I think it's still an issue that isn't entirely resolved. The judge apparently didn't consider that the terms and conditions of the provider generally do not allow sharing of an internet access in this manner.

Re: Re:

It would show that the user operated in a negligent fashion to start with. The ISP does not allow sharing, but willfully sharing your internet connection violates the terms, so the end user should be liable for what happens on their connection.

Further, if the wireless device in question is shipped with security enabled (which most are now) and was willfully and intentionally disabled or bypassed, it shows intent to allow anyone to do anything on their connection, creating liability.

Remember, without the open wireless, there would be no crime. Open wireless is a choice, not a requirement.

Re:

I'd love it if an ISP actually had this in their TOS. Thou shalt not share your connection. That would make it so you couldn't use a router at all, since how is the ISP able to distinguish between devices you own that are on the network and devices other people own that are on the network?

Re: Re:

I mean, imagine it. I live in a 2 bed apartment and I pay the internet bill (my choice to do so). Because I love getting the latest and greatest in hardware, I got a dual-band Netgear 802.11n router. I've got a PC, Xbox 360 and PS3 in my room, all connected to it, while my roomie has a laptop, iPad and smartphone. I also have the router broadcasting a Guest account, in case someone in the apartment block needs to check their email. I consider it being neighbourly.
So...wanna tell me again that an ISP should enforce such a provision, given that its impossible to do so and would only negatively impact their customers?

Re: Re:

I hate to say it, but he could very well be right, inasmuch as verbiage forbidding 'sharing'. However, no ISP would try to directly enforce this: I think they put that in there so that they can refuse to do tech support if you admit you have a router somewhere on the line.

Regardless, an ISP's contractual issues with a customer would not give a third party (like Liberty) any standing to sue. That's just Carreon-thinking right there.

Re: Re:

This used to be a very common term, although more and more ISPs have been dropping it over the past decade.

It doesn't prevent you from using routers. You are able to share the internet connection to as many devices as you wish on your premises. It applied only to sharing the connection to people outside your premises.

It was always pretty much completely unenforceable and silly, and I doubt that anybody ever took it seriously.

Re: Re: Re:

I think of it like the terms once upon a time where the cable company demanded they were the only ones who were allowed to put cable lines into different rooms of your home. Then it was decided their rights over the cord ended at the wall of the house. As long as your not hacking the system, they don't get to say you can only have 2 pieces of coax outlet unless you pay us to do more.

Re:

Terms and conditions of the provider are meaningless. The average person has no idea what a secure wireless network is. The average ISP doesn't provide good secure wireless even for those that issue their own access points nor can they require that you use secure wireless because of device compatibility.

From a computer security perspective it is a dead issue. The average person cannot control this.

This would be akin to saying that a person is negligent for their car's emissions going out of whack because they got some bad gas

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"The average person has no idea what a secure wireless network is."

You can say that again. I've been trying to get my parents to understand the implications of not securing their open wi-fi network, as well as the pitfalls of using other open networks that are untrusted. I honestly don't think I got through to them. They just don't understand this tech stuff which I think probably holds true for a great many other internet users out there too. I've found even the ones who do understand it, or at least believe they do, usually don't get it right either.

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Hard for me to see how that could work in practice

Negligence under tort law is defined individually by each state, but presumably the unification of copyright law under Federal jurisdiction overrides the states' ability, here. And as far as I remember, the Federal copyright act does not define a "duty of care" standard.

Re: Hard for me to see how that could work in practice

If you could get around federal preemption, I could see this being asserted as a pure state law claim. Think of it this way: If you let a guy in a ski mask borrow your gun, which he then uses to rob a bank, the bank might sue you for negligence.

Here's the kicker though - under a pure negligence theory, you don't get statutory damages. You only get actual losses (plus punitives, which are still limited relative to statutory damages). Which is probably why copyright holders haven't tried rolling it out more often.

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There is no law saying you have to protect your network.

Plus it would be like breaking in someones house stealing their guns then going out and killing people with them. Then finally when the police catches up they give the original owner life in prison for not having their gun cabinets better protected.

What if you loaned a gun to a friend that has a gun card then he goes on a rampage? I loan one of my buddies my rifle pretty much every time hunting season is open.
By their logic it would be entirely my fault.

What if someone bypassed your networks security? Would it still be your fault?

I mean lets be realistic most home networks are not very secure. It's just a thin shield to give the average user a sense of false security.

Even worse the majority do not even change the default password. On top of that it's not hard at all to make yourself look like them.

Na someone needs to prove their IP collecting is very very flawed. Someone needs to find a torrent with them logging it and connect with millions of IPs. In that action you just set up a ton of innocent people.

What would happen to them people? Well they would most likely be extorted out of a few grand each.

Thinking about that really pisses me off. I am going to put on a show to prove my point.

Back in the late 90's and early 2000's I had over 300,000 just waiting for me. You'd be surprised how many people would download anything if they think it could be used to dupe.

Now it's years down the road and I'm not into that shit anymore BUT!!! there are plenty who still are.

They're never gonna make laws to stop these scumbags from extorting people till someone sets them up. After they try to extort a few hundred thousand innocent people, the law will have no choice than to make laws to stop such dirty actions from taking place.

It's absurd that it would have to go that far to see change. These morons like King need to have their citizenship revoked and their asses thrown in Gitmo. They're doing more damage to this world than any terrorist could ever dream of.

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The judge in theft cases usually don't consider that various security devices generally do not allow illegitimate bypasses of safety measures. It's not a dead legal issue; we should be pursuing the prosecution of owners who fail to sufficiently secure their stolen goods.

jov

Re: jov

That statement is so broad that it's just silly. I disagree with what I think you mean (I should not be responsible for the misuse of my wifi unless I am aware that it is being misused and continue to allow it anyway), what you're saying here is even broader than that.

You're saying that even if you have your wifi locked down and it's cracked (not that difficult to do even if you're using WPA2) then you're still responsible for what the crackers do.

In other words, you're saying that there is no responsible way to use wifi except by employing a VPN. Which makes Wifi unavailable as a consumer item, since most people couldn't tell you what VPN means, let alone know how to set one up.

Re: jov

Hmmm

Great router comments, but what then happens when the provider actually also provides the router as well that has that capability to share and broadcast? I have had two different providers in the last few years that provided the wireless router as well, both times set up with default names, no security, wide open.

Re: Hmmm

Ditto, here. While I opted for the standard cable modem (why pay $15/month for a $60 router?), and use my own (secured) wireless router, I was OFFERED a wireless router by my ISP. In fact, in the instructions for automated "internet repair," there is a reminder for the user to "temporarily connect the computer directly to the modem, since a router may cause communication issues with the server."

Re: Hmmm

what then happens when the provider actually also provides the router as well that has that capability to share and broadcast?

I don't see how that changes any of the arguments either for or against liability. Just because the provide is lending it to you doesn't mean you can't configure it. (and if you really can't configure it, then don't use it).

Personally, I wouldn't use a provider-supplied router under any circumstances. ISPs are generally untrustworthy and shady, so the less reliant I am on anything they provide the better. You never know what backdoors that router might contain.

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The court dismissed the entire complaint, but more on a technicality (the work named does not match the registered copyright). But it certainly appears from this ruling that the negligence claim (and others like it) are dead issues. Someone could, conceivably be sued for contributory infringement for how they run the network (if they actively participate), but negligence? Nope.

I see that you were hedging there. The judge did more than say the negligence claim was untenable--the court completely rejected the argument saying that as a matter of law the argument is meritless. While the mismatched registration was enough to dismiss the infringement claim for failure to state a claim, the judge actually looked at and rejected the negligence claim (while infringement requires the claim of a valid registration, negligence does not). So when you say that the court dismissed both claims "more on a technicality," that's not quite right. The infringement claim was dismissed because of the technicality (the mismatched registration), but the negligence claim was shot down as being without merit as a matter of law. This is a complete defeat on the negligence claim.

The technicality is a story itself

"The court dismissed the entire complaint, but more on a technicality (the work named does not match the registered copyright)."

I find this reasoning pretty significant, actually.

Liberty own sthe moie "Corbin Fisher Amateur College Men Down on the Farm." The file apparantly torrented was called "Corbin Fisher's Down on the Farm." Liberty claimed the file with that title was protected by the same copyright as its movie. Uh uh.

What happens if a porn maker owns the copyright to "Bang Bus 5" and you torrent your own movie called "Bangin on a Bus 5"? Can they sue all your viewers for trying to infringe their copyright?

Re: The technicality is a story itself

They were not helped by producing a reproduction of the actual copyright registration to the court in their filing like so many trolls do.
Slipshod until the end it seems.
The movie in question is often just called Down on the Farm, the Hash(s) they are using in their multitude of cases do actually point to what I believe are copies of the Corbin Fisher blah blah blah Down on the Farm DVD ripped to a smaller format. Every filing in the "Down on the Farm" cases just calls it Down on the Farm, never establishing the full name and then saying after we just call it Down on the Farm. Sometimes they include the copyright registration page, but more often don't and just cite the number. To have a valid claim one needs to actually reference real titles, not shortened forms. Otherwise it becomes difficult to know what the allegedly infringed property really was.

Its kinda how no one has ever explained how the "IP tracking" firm was able to confirm the file being shared was actually the film in question. Because you can't compare it to the DVD, or the footage, or make your own rip of it... you need to download the file and then look at it... and your doing this using BitTorrent where clients upload as they download different pieces... so to "verify" this is indeed the material at question you were participating in sharing material making the infringment worse. But they never want to speak about this.

This case worries me about the roommate not answering the charges, there are several trolling cases involving LMH and their corporate council Randazza in their cases and cases farmed out to smaller firms allowed to practice in other states where the service has been found to be lacking. In every one of these cases they file "proof" of service then as soon as the window closes they move for default. They've been caught a couple times having not provided valid service to defendants, either to disguise the defendant is well outside the courts jurisdiction or to just land a tasty default judgement.

I can show a proof service claiming it was served in the middle of a lake, and 4 (or was it 5) attempts at service/move for default in 1 case and the court was displeased with their inability to provide the legally required service and be truthful.

The technicality is a story itself

"The court dismissed the entire complaint, but more on a technicality (the work named does not match the registered copyright)."

I find this reasoning pretty significant, actually.

Liberty owns the movie "Corbin Fisher Amateur College Men Down on the Farm." The file apparently torrented was called "Corbin Fisher's Down on the Farm." Liberty claimed the file with that title was protected by the same copyright as its movie. Uh uh.

What happens if a porn maker owns the copyright to "Bang Bus 5" and you torrent your own movie called "Bangin on a Bus 5"? Can they sue all your viewers for trying to infringe their copyright?